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tv   Lou Dobbs Tonight  FOX Business  November 6, 2019 10:00pm-11:00pm EST

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have that tomorrow night, and guy benson, and dave smith, and anderson. i'll see it all. good night. liz: thank you so mur watching. lou dobbs is next. have a good evening. lou: good edge, the nation's capital, the dc swamp is overrub with simple minded left-wing zealots assuming the american populace is as simple. they are working overtime trying to overthrow president trump and trying to create as much fictional drama as possible from the tedious transcripts of the tepid testimony of so-called
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witnesses in their pretend inquiry upon which they dream of impeaching the president of the united states. it doesn't get much more fanciful than that. for example, today's transcripts of ambassador william taylor's testimony in one of adam schiff's secret hearings. the transcripts show taylor said he believed the president wanted them to investigate burisma. but he said that was the result of a report in the "new york times." not because of anything he observed or communication he had with the president or state department officials. for the latest on the impeachment press we turn to chief white house correspondent, john roberts.
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reporter: the latest transcript to be released, ambassador bill day loesch who says he believes there was a quid pro quo, that aid to ukraine was tied to an investigation. i observe thanked in order to move forward on the security assistance, the ukrainians were told by ambassador sondland that they had to pursue these investigations. but what taylor heard was all based on what ambassador sondland said he presumed was going on. where was this conditioning coming from if you are not sure it was coming from the president? i think it was coming from mr. giuliani. but not from the president? i don't know. taylor also confirmed that the
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ukrainians were unaware that aid was on hold at the time president trump spoke with ukrainian president zelensky. congressman ratcliffe asks, to your knowledge nobody in the ukrainian government was aware of the hold? >> and bass doer taylor, that's correct. congressman jim jordan, lee zeldin and mark meadows -- >> as we hear more testimony, the testimony we heard today it's getting easier to defend the president. reporter: now all eyes are turned to john bolton and whether the committees will subpoena him for his scheduled appearance tomorrow. lou: as the radical dimms in the house of representatives obsess over efforts to overthrow the president, senate hahr majority -- senate majority
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leader said if the house were to impeach the president, the senate would acquit. >> it looks like they will send it over to the senate. that means we'll have to take it up. i will say i'm pretty sure how it's likely toned. if it were today, i don't think there is any question it would not lead to a removal. lou: joining us tonight, congressman doug collins. the ranging member of the house judiciary committee. thanks for being here tonight. as john roberts reports, after all the hell me -- after all the melodrama. it amounts to not one whit.
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am i businessing something? >> they are not looking for something factual. they are just looking for ways to get at this president. bill taylor's prepresumptions. the democrats are just taking this line and trying to piece together a puzzle the american people are looking at saying this is not a puzzle we are buying anymore. ukrainians did not know the discussions were going on. zelensky said i didn't feel any pressure. july 25, all the stuff mr. day more was taking place was further than that. he was talking about the pressure coming for these meetings. he pointed to mr. giuliani. he didn't point to the president. if adam schiff is going after
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the president, the president said there was no quid pro quo which we believe, and it was backed up by the transcript and backed up by the actions. >> that what amounts to as i would say in layman's terms, it amounts to nothing, nada. it's zilch. to watch the spectacle of the democratic chairs of these committee leading this quest for more nonsense after experiencing three years of nonsense as a result of the special counsel, they contrived and corruptly in my judgment created, this is appalling there is not an honest voice in that entire party to say this is madness, end it. >> you would hope they would do that. but again i only said this is about the tears flowing from november 16 in brooklyn. when they thought they were
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going to coordinate hillary clinton as president. they set it up in the doj. i'm waiting for the report on the fisa abuse. why are they continuing this process? if i had the democratic candidate they have i would be searching for an out as well. they are trying to take out the president with a call that was not a problem. and they are going against our very foreign policy. we are supposed to not give to where places of corruption are. ambassador taylor said the ukrainians had a lot of corruption. we gave them real tools to fight the russians and others. why is it so bad? if you are looking at corruption and joe biden's son was part of that corruption. since when did a news network such as this talk about it and
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the president can't bring up corruption because he's running for president? we are setting up a double standard that just because he's running for president he becomes a political foe. i think this is corruption at its heart. lou: i think you are right. it's corruption within the hillary clinton campaign. it may well reach into the obama administration's highest levels in point of fact because we have every reason to believe the president of the united states at various point was being informed of what was transpiring in the so-called understand policy and the conspiracy to entrap and surveil a candidate and a president of the united states. >> have much so. let's don't take our eye off the ball. the democrats would like you to forget the mueller report existed. they would like you to forget
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the fisa abuse. they wish they were far in the past names. mr. dur happen is looking into this so mr. brennan and some of these other folks. the president had every right to be concerned with what was happening in ukraine. the corruption, the intelligence, the things coming out of there all had a ukrainian connection. but to his credit they said we'll continue to work on this and there was nothing but a bunch of folks trying to read something into it. ambassador taylor wasn't on the call. he didn't have a briefing on the transcript until it was released. it will be interesting next week when he has a chance in public to answer these questions. lou: i hear the word concerned, troubled. i have heard more emotional
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atmospherics from the people they put forward to testify than i have heard any way in reference to fact, direct observation or eyewitness. it's an amazing trail of witnesses that have been produced to this point. congressman, good as always. thanks for being with us. we appreciate it. congressman doug collins. the gunmen who killed those nine americans in mexico may have mistaken the family's suvs for those of a rival gang. that's something of a reach, don't you think? the mexican press apparently does not. president manuel lopez obrador suggested the mormon families with their young children and the blond haired mothers of the children might be the victims of
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a fight between the cartels. it prompted ohio's senator josh hole lawly. with mexico enough is enough. the u.s. government should impose sanctions on mexican officials including freezing assets. they are openly slaughtering american citizens and trafficking children and drugs. voters overwhelmingly rejected a referendum to be that state's first sanctuary city. 71% of the votes cast, 29% supporting the proposition. there are almost twice as many
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democratic registered voters in tucson as republicans. and 49% of the citizens are hispanic or latino. a man detained near the border. a lot of folks said they thought this was going to be a suspect in that massacre of those americans because he had with him two hostages, assault rifles and a bullet-proof suv. but authorities are saying he's not linked to the cartel attack. they don't say why they believe that. they don't explain what he was actually doing or what happened to him as a result of having those hostages. there is very little. but these are the most urgent and recent developments, and we'll bring the details just as soon as we get them. an update on when to expect michael horowitz's findings on
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lou: the democratic race for governor in kentucky. bevin had a 34% approval rating. but the other five statedwide candidates in kentucky went on to win easily. including daniel cameron who became the state's first african-american attorney general as well as the first republican attorney general in more than 70 years. in virginia democrats took full control of state government for the first time since the early 1990s. four years ago republicans had a narrow lead in the senate and the house of delegates. tonight the dems have the lead in the senate and house.
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and the democratic governor ramp northam remains governor. the president is to speak at a rally in louisiana to help the party. a pu poll shows a majority of registered voters believe president trump will win in 2020 and serve a second term. swing voters from pennsylvania showing rock solid support for president trump. one woman saying nothing could change her mind. listen in. >> is there anything that he could do or anything that would happen that would make you not
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vote for him? >> no. >> if he shot someone on fifth avenue. >> why did he shoot him? lou: that's one of the problems. their panel participants are a lot smarter than sometimes the people asking the questions. by the way, we have the same trouble with me occasionally. one of the president's lasting legacies will be the transformation of the federal judiciary. the president touted his administration's achievements in affirming federal judges. president trump: thanks to many of the people here today my administration and republicans in congress confirmed 150 federal judges, and it's substantially higher than that, mitch. it's 159. and we should have within the next short period of time like
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two months, we should have 182 federal judges. how's that? good? lou: joining us tonight, former reagan white house political director, the a vont himself, ed rollins. let's start with kentucky. it looks like when vinnie's contesting that close -- it looks like bevin is contesting that close race. he was a poor performer. every other republican won by a huge margin. >> this man has been one of the most unpopular governors in the country for a long time. democrats worked hard on this race. and at the end of the day the republicans across the state did extremely well. lou: obviously the republicans
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worked harder because they won all of those races. the attorney general, thing a secretary got 120,000 more votes than did bevin for reelection. it's stunning stuff. >> you have to remember the newly elected governor, his father served two terms as governor. >> so it's genetic. lou: i know what you are going to say. >> it was 28,000 people who voted as libertarians. they are conservative, they don't want to vote for the democrats, and i think at the end of the day they will be our voters in the final analysis. lou: the margin is 5,000 votes and 28,000 libertarian votes? >> they will be our votes next
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year in the presidential race. the bottom line is virginia was going south on us and we had to fight for that. kentucky is a solid republican state. mississippi is a solid republican state. lou: by the way, while we are talking about libertarians, hillary clinton complaining about jill stein. but there is real simple empirical evidence of how much it cost president trump in 2016 because gary johnson the libertarian candidate took six states? it's stunning stuff. that would have amounted to 37 more electoral votes. >> there will always be a third party, a fourth party. you have to win with less than 50% of the vote. trump will do well in the states
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he would be last time. even the democrats are still worried. after thinking he stole the election, he obviously didn't. they are terribly frightened, who can beat trump. they don't think anybody can. lou: it's five 80s he would have won. let's turn to if we can the idea that this president has put 157 judges forward. can we look at that graphic? i'm calling for a graphic, folks. there we are. total judicial appointments. 157 by this president. 8 years of obama, 103. 8 years of bush, 156. he's already beat his predecessors. i think it's a metaphor for his achievements overall. he's done this in three years
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while others have taken 8 years to do far more. >> he's a good strong conservatives who believe in the way the constitution is written. he has a supreme court that should go in the right direction. my sense is this will be one of the many legacies, restoring dignity to the white house and repairing the economy. lou: we would like to hear our thoughts on this. a programming note. peter navarro, victor davis hanson and charlie hurt among our guests tomorrow. disturbing comments from the so-called whistleblower's attorney about impeaching president trump. those comments coming to light. we take that up with victoria toensing and joe digenova. may 1 of '75...
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lou: china imposing a game curfew for those under 18. kids will be band from playing video games between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m. the rule will stop them from playing for more than 90 minutes and weekdays and 3 hours on weekends and holidays. a recent study shows american teenagers play video games on average for 2.5 hours per day. 5-12 world play anywhere from 42
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minutes to 2 hours a day. a bold forecast from huawei's founder saying they can survive without the united states. he said the ongoing trade talks are not something he's concerned with. last year huawei sent 11 million on components made by u.s. companies. fbi director christopher wray telling congress his bureau has a lot of concern about american companies who are storing consumer data in china. >> chinese law compels chinese companies and u.s. companies off rating in china to have relationships with different kinds of chinese companies to provide whatever information the government wants whenever it wants. lou: you would think it was an
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authoritarian government, wouldn't you. joining us, fred fleitz. great to have you with us. let's start with christopher wray's alarm about u.s. companies in china. they basically will have to do whatever chain a decide they will do with all of the data within the territorial boundaries of the people's republic. off course. we know this. it's technology transfer. it's theft of interest electric fuel property. it's the cornerstone of the president's trade talks with china that has to to stop. i am happy to hear wray say this but we all know this. lou: december 1 this goes into effect in a powerful and direct way. the idea of storing this data in china for any u.s. company is highly irresponsible, is it not? >> it doesn't make any sense.
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when an american company opens up a sensitive factory or facility, they have to hire chinese employees, they are there to steal technology and steal data. the u.s. government knows that and american companies have to keep that in find when they are doing business with china. lou: there has been a delay in the so-called phase one negotiations that were to result in a signing with president xi and president trump on the 17th of november. that date has been moved to sometime in december if they can reach agreement. this is a statement they have not reached sufficient agreement to contemplate. there is a coincidence here. december 1, the date at which the chinese government will take on these companies and the data they want in the 15th of december when the president
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threatened greater tariffs. >> i think we are in a good position to get a deal. our economy is really soaring. theirs is in more and more trouble for a variety of reasons. it put the president and his negotiators in a good position to pressure the chinese. the chinese do not like where they are right now. let's put it directly. they are acting as untrustworthy as one can imagine. let alone one of the world's largest nations sitting across from the united states at that negotiating table. they are reneging on deals, they did so in may. they said as they promised that they would buy $40 billion do $50 billion in agricultural product. we wouldn't want it to be
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anything outside the normal patterns of purchasing by the chinese and also we would insist any tariffs be rolled back as an act of good faith. >> we are making progress slowly. the chinese are used to rolling u.s. officials and negotiators. lou: negotiations with robert light here is and steve mnuchin. >> there are decades of if there was pressure enough they would roll over. we just have to keep to it. lou: huawei a national security threat or not? this is as confusing matter. some companies are given waivers to do business with a national security threat as this administration has designated them. what is going on? there is so much ambiguity in cross purpose here when it comes to huawei. >> the chinese government is subsidizing huawei to set up 5g
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networks worldwide as part of a chinese global intelligence network. lou: china is roaring ahead with 5g. >> it is. but this advantage, this economic advantage is how china is getting this technology into countries worldwide not just to steal military and strayed secrets, but personal information worldwide. lou: i understand. but what i don't comprehend is how there can be so much ambiguity whether they are a national security threat with these waivers grant towvmentd s. companies doing business with them. it's as if to say the come any making money can continue to do so with them. but for everybody else they are a national security threat. it's inconsistent. >> i think they are trying to find a way to negotiate with the chinese government and keep huawei out of 5g but i think
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there are some problems here. lou: up next, the new evidence that an attorney for the so-called whistleblower is something of a partisan hack is the way some would
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middleman to get personal information on thousands of personal accounts of the dissenters, including a close ally of jamal sk gentleman jamal kishoghi. 10 days after the president's inauguration. daid rye tweeted news about sally yates getting fired. captioning his tweet with coup has started. first of many steps. rebellion. impeachment will follow ultimately. lawyers. there is even one about how cnn will help bring down the president. zaid says i predict cnn will play a key role? president trump not finishing out his full term as president.
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there seems to be some confusion about when we'll all get to see the justice department inspector general michael horowitz's report on fisa abuse. an anonymous source telling "the washington post" the report will be out before thanksgiving. but another anonymous source says a number of complicated issues make that target unlikely. so we not we would ask it to break the tie. do you have think the fisa abuse report will be released before or after thanksgiving? i think we know as much as those anonymous sources so cast your vote on my twitter page @loudobbs. joining me, victoria toensing, and joe digenova, former u.s. attorney for the district of columbia, the founding partners of the digenova toensing law firm. i know you have been traveling
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and it's good to see you back. let's turn to the inspect for general report. i will be in the same position i have been in for two years. are we ever going to see this report? >> you are going to see it, lou. but i'm not predicting so much from anonymous sources. but i can tell you this, we have darn good sources for this. it's going to be very bad for the people in the obama administration. my source said to me, it's going to be worse than you can imagine. lot * well, that's a -- lou: that's a heck of a tease. i'm champing at the bit to get my teeth into that thing. it doesn't sound like it will be a tepid matter. explosive, you would say? >> i would say for people at the highest levels of the fbi and
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justice department, more important the justice department, it will be devastating. it will ruin careers. it will make people have bar problems. it's going to be. >> bill barr problems. >> no, bar association problems. what's clear is the senior levels of the obama justice department were complicit in knowingly submitting materially false applications to the fisa court for an illegitimate counter intelligence purpose, not for a legitimate purpose. but to spy on americans for political purposes. it will end up being the beginning of the greatest political scandal in history. it's being held up partially because of john durham's new grand jury which exists for one reason, people are going to be indicted. lou: he's in charge of the fisa
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abuse and the origins of spygate, whatever you want to call it. the worst political scandal in this country's history. is anything being held you have because of the vast scope of his investigation? >> it's been expanded because he's going into whole other areas. he has gone back into the origins of the investigation. for those of us who know this business, if you are in counter-intelligence and you get a word that a george papadopoulos has said he heard something that the russians had something. you go knock on his door within a week and ask him about it and ask him give you have the information. where did he get it. they didn't do that. they didn't do that at all. they disobeyed all the rules of a counter intelligence investigation. >> it expand because originally barr wanted durham to look at
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the beginnings of cross-fire hurricane. but they found out with the devin nunes experience in march of 2017 that there had been massive unmaskings of americans for political purposes. and that information was given and leaked to the press. the michael flynn, ambassador kislyak call which was leaked to david ignatius of the post is the subject of one of the criminal investigations because that leak is a 20-year felony. >> i have another idea for durham. he he should bring in mark base. was he talking to james clapper? did he know clapper was going to leak the dossier? lou: james clapper was talking to a number of people.
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all those are good questions. i wanted to end with your answers. it's great to see you both. appreciate it. a basketball player for the university of texas make an incredible comeback. andrew jones returned to the court last night after a two-year absence after he under went treatment for through keep yap. the texas longhorns guard scoring career best 20 points last night helping his team both northern colorado. after the game georges said it felt great to be back on the court. you have next, facebook tries to avoid an investigation of its privacy practices. are there signs of trouble at the "new york times"? or should we say more trouble at the "times"? sir, you're a broker. what do you charge for online equity trades?
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lou: trouble for the "new york times." their stock dropping 7%. the "new york times" started falling after the company reported continued declines in advertising revenue down 10%.
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17% for digital ads. california's state attorney general says facebook isn't complying with subpoenas as part of the state's investigation of the come numbers privacy practices. bacerra is describing the responses he received as inadequate. newly released documents reveal facebook harvested users data to benefit friends with 7,000 pages of documents expose how zuckerberg rewarded partners, giving them access to certain types of user data while denying the same access to facebook's competitors. joining us is the 2016 trump
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campaign manager and senior manager to the 2020 campaign, corey lewandowski. what took you so long? >> i am doing my little part. lou: it's great to see you there. i know you will do a bang-up job, a great job for the president. let's start with the documents, the transcripts being revealed, of testimony to me is as tiresome as it can be. i haven't seen anything that amounts to a hill of beans from the adam schiff intelligence scam. >> there is nothing there to see. what the american people will get a chance to witness is how insane these impeachment hearings are. we know the president didn't commit any crimes. we know there are no high crimes
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or misdemeanors. the american people know there was no quid pro quo here. but what we have also seen is adam schiff using his authority in congress to selectively leak information he thinks will help his case for the impeachment of the president. lou: one of the problems here is schiff wants everybody to talk latin, quid pro quo. i want them to use at least one french word instead, coup attempt. people can focus on what's going on here. i don't care whether the left-wing media likes it or not. this is this is -- this is a try being committed by the democratic party, it's in my opinion a great crime against the nation. >> president trump has come here three years ago and has
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fundamentally transformed the way washington works. all of a sudden we have a career military person who is so concerned he didn't raise the issue to the proper authorities. the same individual who was on the ukraine desk when joe biden was vice president and his son was doing business over there and now he's concerned? these are the career bureaucrats fighting back against a president who wants to change washington. lou: but washington is not only fighting back, but they are doing so with he weapon at their disposal. the democratic party on capitol hill. the permanent bureaucracy. the administrative state. the deep state. i want to turn to what the president is going to do, based on just a peek at an election last night. we saw in kentucky an unpopular
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governor who looks like he's going to be defeated. it's too close to call. but the fact is that governor didn't do nearly as well as the five other statewide candidates, whether the agriculture secretary, to be general, you name it. underperforming across the line. do you put any value on the lesson? >> i was with the president down in kentucky for that rally. it was a massive crowd. yesterday the republicans won 7 out of 8 state offices from kentucky to mississippi. lou: i have to ask you to stay with us through this commercial break. break. we have one break. we have one ♪ do you recall, not long ago ♪ we would walk on the sidewalk ♪ ♪ all around the wind blows ♪ we would only hold on to let go ♪ ♪ blow a kiss into the sun ♪ we need someone to lean on
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i am royalty of racing, i am alfa romeo. lou: we are back with corey lewandowski. thanks for staying with us through the commercial break. i want to turn quickly about what you are going to do about voters in 2020. >> in eastern pennsylvania we have some issues we need to address. we did well in western pennsylvania. you look at the state of virginia, it's clearly gone far to the left from the influx of government employees. we have some work to do in the suburbs. but the economic policy will come to fruition on election day
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and president trump will get re-elected. lou: thanks so much, corey lewandowski. great to see you. thank you for being with us. good night from new [♪] trish: tonight, my exclusive interview with the vice president of the united states of america. his first interview since the dems took their vote to move forward with an impeachment hearing. i'm trish regan. it's been quite a day. the dems signaling they are just getting started as they prepare for public hearings next week. amid his i could i met with vice president mike pence. his first interview since the news broke. >> welcome to the white house. trish: we have never seen anything historically speaking quite like this. the lack

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